1981 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual came with a price tag of £ 1,50 and was 128
pages thick.
Contents: Sweeny Toddler (6 sets by Tom Paterson), Webster (3 episodes,
probably by Artie Jackson), Lolly Pop (2 sets by Sid Burgon, one
reprint and one new), Blunder Puss (by Jim Crocker), TheChumpions (3 reprints from COR!!, art by Peter Davidson), The
Ghost’s Revenge (by Jim Crocker), Horrornation Street (a 3-pager by
Tom Williams), The Forest Legion (a 6-pager),Ghouldilocks (by Tom
Williams), The Duke’s Spook (by Tom
Williams), Shake (by Terry Bave), The Ghoul Guides
(2 sets by an unknown artist), Grimly Feendish (a 4-pager by Paul Ailey, signed, and a reprint
from SMASH!), Robby Hood (reprint from COR!!, art by Ron Turner), X-word
(crossword), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid (2 episodes, possibly new sets by Mike Brown), Sports School, Ghoul
Getters Ltd (by Tom Williams), ‘Orrible Hole (by Les Barton), The
Fixer, Shiver and Shake Spot the Difference (2 installments using front covers of old SHIVER AND SHAKE weeklies); Frankie
Stein (two reprints from Shiver and Shake weeklies), Dodgem
Game, Octopus Maze, Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (a 4-pager
and a 2-pager by Norman Mansbridge, possibly reprints), Toby’s Timepiece (7
pages), Moana Lisa (2 sets, including one by Peter Davidson), The
Hand (by Tom Williams), The Desert Fox (by Terry Bave), Moving
House (7 pages by Steve Bell), Shiver (by Terry Bave).
Tom Williams contributed eleven pages of Horrornation Street, Ghouldilocks,
The
Duke’s Spook, Ghoul Getters Ltd. and The
Hand. I think it is the first time that Tom Williams was asked to draw Ghoul Getters Ltd:
All 6 sets of Sweeny Toddler are by Tom Paterson. They are either reprints of the episodes
from WHOOPEE!, or possibly new material drawn especially for this Annual. Here
is one:
In the new episode of the Forest Legion Boss and Butch have a clever plan how to sneak into Lord Stately’s home and rob the Lord. The plan involves joining the Lord’s hunting party, bagging a fox and getting invited into the house. Needless to say, the legionnaires derail the plan once again.
The episode of Shake is interesting in the sense that it plays the theme of the old and long-forgotten rivalry between Shiver and Shake. I wonder how many readers of the Annual still remembered the times when the comic was a two-in-one package, like Whizzer and Chips…
The Ghoul Guides is the only new
strip included in this Annual. It tells the adventures of two scout guides who
are in fact young witches. In the first tale they try to earn their medical badge
and in the second – their needlework badge. Illustrator unknown.
Grimly Feendish thinks of another smart
scheme how to rob people’s homes at Christmas: his Carol singers make such a horrid
row that Grimly easily sells his soundproof ear-muffs to the annoyed citizens.
Now he is free to break into their house as they sleep because they can’t hear
anything. On his way out Grimly runs into Father Christmas, accidentally knocks
him down and comes up with an idea to rob every house in town disguised as
Santa. The tale becomes completely surreal towards the end when it turns out
that a lot of the story was in fact Grimly’s dream… or was it not??? Artwork by
Paul Ailey.
The second set of Grimly Feendish looks like a
reprint. In it the crook takes up collecting stamps and has a go at the famous
penny green…
In the episode of Toby’s Timepiece, Toby trips on his
long Doctor Who scarf and finds himself centuries back in time where he gets to
meet a greedy time-thief – a villainous scientist from the future who has built
a time machine to travel back in time and steal treasures from medieval knights.
The knights take Toby for the time-thief’s accomplice but the boy returns them
their treasure. Furious, the scientist transports Toby with him to his own time
in the future where Toby is taken into custody by the scientist’s robots. In a
strange and unconvincing twist of the plot Toby persuades the robots that the
Professor has to be arrested for possession of unauthorized valuables that are
the spoils of his many raids into the past…
The last new strip I would like to cover is the second installment of Moving
House by Steve Bell (the first appeared in the 1980 Shiver and Shake Annual). This time the
Hardy family start all over again, as if the first episode had never happened –
they are still unaware that the old grandfather clock in the attic is in fact a
time machine and turning its hands means time-travel, house and all… The family
are on their way to the circus, what they don’t realize is that the time machine
has transported them to ancient Rome so they find themselves in Circus Maximus
where they have a narrow escape from being run over in a horse chariot race. They escape from Circus Maximus to the relative safety of their house but the
restless Grandpa turns the hands of the clock once again and the house lands in
the Middle Ages where Grandpa is seized by a mean baron. Luckily for him, the
same baron later challenges one of the Hardy boys to a joust, and is defeated.
The Hardys return back home and reckon that the clock must be some sort of time
machine. In the end, they get back to the 20th century just in time for the
circus performance…
There are quite a few reprints in the Annual. I’ll mention two: Robby
Hood is a reprint of the third story of Robby Hood and His One Man Band
that ran in COR!! from 13th February until 27th March, 1971 (issue Nos. 37 –
43). You can read my account of the story HERE.
There are two reprints of Frankie Stein from old SHIVER AND SHAKE weeklies: a 3-page ballet set from SHIVER AND SHAKE No.
51 cover dated February 23rd, 1974, art by Robert Nixon (one of the best sets
by Mr. Nixon, IMHO), and a 2 ¾-pager from SHIVER AND SHAKE No. 54 cover-dated
March 16th, 1974, art by Frank McDiarmid (an excellent energy-packed episode in
which Prof. Cube invents a special high-pitched dog whistle that makes
Frankie believe he is a dog). Here are sample pages from the two sets:
Overall, this is quite an unimpressive
package to my eye.
Now I'm worried - because I can't remember if I've got any Shiver & Shake Annuals or not. I'll have to check and see, 'cos they look pretty cool. I'd guess I must have at least one, but I'm not absolutely certain. Tell you what - wrap up your copies and send them to me so they're not lying about under your feet. Only thinking of your safety of course - wouldn't want you to trip up over them and damage yourself. (Thinks: Wonder if he'll fall for that?)
ReplyDeleteKid, they are pretty cool indeed and will get even better for a while before becomming kind of boring towards the very end. And I will consider your kind offer to take my copies.. err, maybe not :)
DeleteFor me there are powerful memories dating back over thirty years attached to this annual, including those of me saying to my grandmother “I’ve already GOT this one” when a second-hand copy came along! The crayon-coloured pages enhance this memory. Agreed it’s a pity there weren’t fewer reprints but the ones that were there didn’t register as such at the time; nothing to compare them to. Unimpressive? Not to me!
ReplyDelete